You're currently on:

Search Site

Product Details

Global Civil Society?

Double click on above image to view full picture

Zoom Out
Zoom In
More Views
find it under: Politics General | Sociology | Globalization |

Global Civil Society?

John Keane

Email to a Friend

Be the first to review this product

Availability: Most titles are instock however if they are not Embiggen Books will contact you with an estimated delivery time.

$ 49.95
Format: Paperback
ISBN: 9780521894623
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Page Count: 236
Description
John Keane, a leading scholar of political theory, tracks the recent development of a big idea with fresh potency - global civil society. In this timely book, Keane explores the contradictory forces currently nurturing or threatening its growth, and he shows how talk of global civil society implies a political vision of a less violent world, founded on legally sanctioned power-sharing arrangements among different and intermingling forms of socio-economic life. Keane's reflections are pitted against the widespread feeling that the world is both too complex and too violent to deserve serious reflection. His account borrows from various scholarly disciplines, including political science and international relations, to challenge the silence and confusion within much of contemporary literature on globalisation and global governance. Against fears of terrorism, rising tides of xenophobia, and loose talk of 'anti-globalisation', the defence of global civil society mounted here implies the need for new democratic ways of living.

Additional Information

Authors John Keane
ISBN 9780521894623
Binding Paperback
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Dimensions 228 x 152 x 14
Page Count 236

Product Tags

Add Your Tags:

Use spaces to separate tags. Use single quotes (') for phrases.

Your Cart

You have no items in your shopping cart.

Delivery Information

We use an Australia Post calculator for providing our freight costs based upon weight and size.

Check our delivery detail page for information